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Why China is losing interest in English

The Straits Times

|

December 17, 2024

Learning the world’s lingua franca is no longer a priority for students or businessmen.

Why China is losing interest in English

In preparation for the Summer Olympics in 2008, the authorities in Beijing, the host city and China's capital, launched a campaign to teach English to residents likely to come in contact with foreign visitors.

Police, transit workers and hotel staff were among those targeted.

One aim was to have 80 per cent of taxi drivers achieve a basic level of competency.

Today, though, any foreigner visiting Beijing will notice that rather few people are able to speak English well. The 80 per cent target proved a fantasy: most drivers still speak nothing but Chinese. Even the public-facing staff at the city's main international airport struggle to communicate with foreigners. Immigration officers often resort to computer-translation systems.

For much of the 40 years since China began opening up to the world, "English fever" was a common catchphrase. People were eager to learn foreign languages, English most of all.

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